How to Draw a Plane: Simple 10-Step Guide for Kids

Ready to take flight? This tutorial is perfect for young artists ages 5 and up who want to draw their own passenger jet. All you need is a pencil, an eraser, and a piece of paper to start building your aviation masterpiece.

10 Steps

🎯 Final Result

A colorful, finished cartoon airplane illustration, perfect for kids' art projects.

Step-by-Step Instructions

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Step 1: Sketching the Fuselage Top

A single curved line representing the top profile of an airplane fuselage on a white background.

Draw a long, gentle curve to form the top of the airplane’s body. Teacher's Tip: Keep your pencil grip loose and your lines light so you can easily adjust the shape if you need to.

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Step 2: Defining the Body

The completed outline of an airplane body showing a rounded nose and a tapered tail section.

Connect the ends of your first line with a second curve to complete the body. Make sure the nose is rounded and the tail tapers off. Tip: Think of the shape like a long, smooth bean.

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Step 3: Adding Windows and Doors

Airplane fuselage with added cockpit window, passenger windows, and a rectangular cabin door.

Draw a curved rectangle for the cockpit windshield and a series of small squares for the passenger windows. Add a larger rectangle with rounded corners for the door. Tip: Use a ruler if you want your window line to be perfectly straight!

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Step 4: Drawing the First Wing

Airplane body with a large, blunt triangular wing attached to the side.

Sketch a blunt triangle shape on the side of the plane to create the wing. Tip: Don't worry about overlapping lines; you can erase the extra marks inside the wing once you're finished.

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Step 5: Adding the Second Wing

Airplane with two wings visible to show perspective and three-dimensional form.

Draw a matching wing on the opposite side to give your plane depth. Tip: Try to make both wings the same size so your plane looks balanced and ready for flight.

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Step 6: Attaching Jet Engines

Airplane with two jet engines attached beneath each wing using cylindrical shapes.

Draw two cylinder shapes under each wing. Use 'C' shaped lines on the front to show the engine intake. Tip: Keep these shapes simple—they don't need to be perfect circles to look great!

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Step 7: Designing the Tail

Airplane with tail stabilizers and a vertical fin added to the rear section.

Add the tail stabilizers using a triangle on the side and a parallelogram on top. Tip: The tail helps the plane steer, so make sure these shapes are firmly attached to the back of the body.

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Step 8: Adding Streamline Details

Airplane with a decorative stripe along the body and engine detail lines.

Draw a long line running down the center of the fuselage, curving around the nose. Add bands to the front of your engines. Tip: This line makes your plane look fast and aerodynamic!

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Step 9: Final Touches

Airplane with final detail lines added to the wings and stabilizers to indicate control flaps.

Add a straight line parallel to the back edge of each wing and stabilizer to show the flaps. Tip: These small details add a professional, realistic touch to your cartoon drawing.

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Step 10: Color Your Aircraft

A fully colored, finished cartoon airplane drawing.

Your outline is finished! Now, bring your plane to life with color. Whether you choose classic white and blue or your own custom airline livery, have fun with it. Tip: Use markers for bold colors or colored pencils for soft shading.